Portrait
A representation of a particular individual, usually intended to capture their likeness or personality.For as long as people have been making art, they have been portraying themselves and others. Portraits can be literal, realistic representations or they can be interpretive, symbolic. By the turn of the 20th century, photography had become the most accessible and popular medium for portraiture. As though photography freed them from the burden of producing realistic depictions, many late-19th and early-20th-century artists began exploring new ways to represent people. Many artists sought to represent the character and psychology of their sitters; similarly, in their self-portraits, they aimed to communicate something of their innermost selves. If they were familiar with their sitter, they might seek to express their relationship to him or her. Their interest in the subjective and emotional, coupled with their desire to break with the traditions of the past, led these artists to make formal innovations that would radically alter the genre of portraiture.
Featured Works
13
Portrait of Joseph Roulin
Vincent van Gogh
Arles, early 1889
President Lincoln
Mathew B. Brady (studio of)
c. 1862
Opus 217. Against the Enamel of a Background Rhythmic wit...
Paul Signac
1890
Self-Portrait with Two Flowers in Her Raised Left Hand
Paula Modersohn-Becker
1907
Young Man in a Gray Sweater (Jacques Lipchitz)
Diego Rivera
Paris 1914
Portrait of Gala
Salvador Dalí
1935
Portrait of Howard Swanson
Beauford Delaney
1967
Portrait Partials
Carolee Schneemann
1970
Portrait of Sidney Janis Selling Portrait of Sidney Janis...
Marisol (Marisol Escobar)
1967-68
Portrait
Louise Lawler
1982
Sunday Francis Mdlankomo, Vosloorus, Johannesburg
Zanele Muholi
2011
Wakeah
Cara Romero
2018
Entity as Information Zoom
Gordon Kipping
1995